अरण्यकाण्डे द्वात्रिंशः सर्गः
Śūrpaṇakhā’s Report to Rāvaṇa and the Panegyric of His Might
स्निग्धवैडूर्यसङ्काशं तप्तकाञ्चनकुण्डलम्।सुभुजं शुक्लदशनं महास्यं पर्वतोपमम्।।।।
snigdha-vaiḍūrya-saṅkāśaṃ tapta-kāñcana-kuṇḍalam | subhujaṃ śukla-daśanaṃ mahāsyaṃ parvatopamam ||
كان يلمع كالفيدوريا المصقول، يضع أقراطًا من ذهب مُحمّى مصقول؛ قويَّ الساعدين، أبيضَ الأسنان، واسعَ الفم، مهيبَ الحضور كالجبل.
Valiant Ravana had an attractive appearance with beautiful dresses twenty arms,ten heads, a broad chest and brilliant royal marks.
The verse supports a recurring Ramayana lesson: beauty, ornament, and impressiveness can mask adharma; discernment must rest on satya (truthfulness) and conduct.
The narrator continues the visual portrait of Rāvaṇa’s imposing, ornamented form.
Physical magnificence is emphasized rather than virtue—creating contrast with the Ramayana’s ideal of inner nobility grounded in dharma.